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What is Language

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Eg) French people pronounce this & that as zis & zat. Eg) English speakers pronounce Nkrumah (the name of a former president of Ghana) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is Language


1
What is Language?
  • Chapter 1
  • Fromkin, Rodman, Hyams. 2003
  • Introduction to language

2
Linguistic Knowledge
  • Language Gift only to human
  • We talk all the time, even in sleep.
  • Language makes humans human.
  • But what does it mean to know a language?
  • Knowledge of the sound system
  • Knowledge of words
  • The creativity
  • Knowledge of sentences nonsentences

3
Knowledge of the Sound System
  • Knowing unconsciously what sounds are in that
    language what sounds are not.
  • Knowledge of sounds is language specific
  • Eg) French people pronounce this that as zis
    zat
  • Eg) English speakers pronounce Nkrumah (the name
    of a former president of Ghana) as Nekrumah or
    Enkrumah

4
Knowledge of Words
  • Knowing that certain sound sequences signify
    certain concepts or meanings
  • The sound units that are related to specific
    meanings ? WORDS
  • The arbitrary relationship between form (sounds)
    meaning (concept)
  • The relationship between speech sounds the
    meanings they represent is, mostly, arbitrary.
  • Eg) house (Eng), maison (French)
  • dom (Russian), casa (Spanish)

5
Knowledge of Words (cntd)
  • But pronunciation sometimes suggests meaning ?
    sound symbolism
  • Most onomatopoeic words
  • buzz, murmur
  • Representations of animal sounds
  • But they are quite different in different
    languages
  • Sometimes particular sound sequences seem to
    relate to a particular concept
  • English gl glare, glint, gleam, glitter,
    glossy, glaze, glance, glimmer, glimpse
  • However gladiator, glucose, glory, globe

6
The Creativity of Linguistic Knowledge
  • Creative aspect of language use being able to
    produce new sentences never spoken before and to
    understand sentences never heard before.
  • The sentence
  • Daniel Boone decided to become a pioneer because
    he dreamed of pigeon-toed giraffes and cross-eyed
    elephants dancing in skirts and green berets on
    the sand-swept plains of the Midwest.
  • You probably never heard or read it before.
  • You may not believe the sentence
  • You may question its logic.
  • But you can understand it.

7
The Creativity of Linguistic Knowledge (cntd)
  • There is no longest sentence.
  • A language permit their speakers to form
    indefinitely long sentences
  • Examples
  • This is the house.
  • This is the house that Jack built.
  • This is the malt that lay in the house that Jack
    built.
  • This is the dog that worried the cat that killed
    the rat that ate the malt that lay in the house
    that Jack built.
  • The old man came.
  • The old, old, old, old, man came.
  • Creativity is a universal property of human
    language all languages are like that.

8
Knowledge of Sentences Nonsentences
  • To memorize and store an infinite set of
    sentences is not possible
  • The brain is finite.
  • Putting one word after another in any order does
    not form sentences.
  • Linguistic knowledge includes determining which
    strings of words are and which are not sentences.
  • See P11(2).

9
Linguistic competence vs. performance
  • Distinction by Chomsky (1965)
  • Competence
  • The native speakers idealized knowledge to
    produce sentences of a language
  • Language universal (independent)
  • Innate, not conscious
  • Performance
  • The actual use of that language in concrete
    situations
  • Language specific (dependent)
  • acquired

10
Grammar
  • The sounds and sound patterns, the basic units of
    meaning such as words, and the rules to combine
    all of these to form sentences with the desired
    meaning.
  • Two concepts of grammar
  • The mental grammar speakers have in their brains
  • The model or description of that internalized
    grammar
  • Two models of grammar
  • Descriptive grammar
  • Prescriptive grammar

11
Descriptive Grammars
  • What native speakers know about their language in
    order to make use of it.
  • Every human being who speaks a language knows its
    grammar.
  • Linguists describe the grammar of the language
    that exists in the minds of its speakers.
  • Grammaticality
  • Grammatical (depending on dialect, style, etc)
  • She doesnt know,
  • She dont know.
  • Ungrammatical (regardless of style)
  • She not know.
  • She knownt.

12
Descriptive Grammars (cntd)
  • No language or dialect is superior to any other
    in a linguistic sense.
  • No grammar, therefore no language, is either
    superior or inferior to any other.
  • Every grammar is equally complex, logical, and
    capable of producing an infinite set of sentences
    to express any thought.

13
Prescriptive Grammars
  • Rules of proper usage that distinguish "good"
    grammar from "bad" grammar
  • He dont know ? Bad
  • An attempt to tell the users of the language how
    to use it in order to speak correctly
  • Grammarians wish to prescribe rather than
    describe the rules of grammar.
  • They believed that language change is corruption,
    and that there are certain forms that all
    educated people should use in speaking and
    writing.? Language Purists

14
Whos right?
  • Prescriptivists are bound to fail.
  • Language is vigorous, dynamic, and constantly
    changing.
  • All languages and dialects are expressive,
    complete, and logical.
  • From a linguistic point of view, prestige and
    standard dialects do not have superior grammars.

15
Teaching grammars
  • Grammars used in school to fulfill language
    requirements.
  • State explicitly the rules of the language, list
    the words and their pronunciations, and aid in
    learning a new language or dialect.
  • Assumes that the student already knows one
    language and compares the grammar of the target
    language with that of the native language.
  • The meaning of a word is given by providing a
    glossthe parallel word in the students native
    language, (eg. house in English as compared to
    maison in French)

16
Language universals
  • Laws representing the universal properties of all
    languages constitute a universal grammar
  • Noam Chomsky
  • There is a universal grammar that is part of the
    human biologically endowed language faculty.
    (Chomsky)
  • Human beings are born with an innate blueprint
    for language ? Universal Grammar
  • The linguists goal is to discover the lows of
    human language

17
What we know about
  • Facts pertaining to all languages
  • See P27
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